Format

Attributes

id (required): A unique identifier made up of letters and numbers. Each widget must have one includable with id='main'.

var (optional) An identifier made up of letters and numbers, for referencing data within this section.

If you make more includables with different IDs, they won't be displayed automatically. However, if you make an includable with id='new', then you can reference it in your main includable with <b:include name='new' /> and it will display that way.

The attributes for the b:include tag are as follows:

name (required): An identifier made up of letters and numbers. It must match the ID of an existing b:includable in the same widget.

data (optional): An expression or piece of data to pass on to the includable section. This will become the value of the var attribute in the includable.

cond (optional) An expression which causes the include to only execute when its result is true. This is the same as the cond attribute on a b:if.

Example

Here's an example that shows how to use b:includable and b:include.

The main thing to understand here is how the "main" section includes the "post" section within it. It passes along a post that it calls "p" and the included section references it as its var "post", then prints the title.

Note that the include only runs while the index is less than 10, so only a max of 10 posts would get rendered in this example (the index starts at 0).

Examples

<data:title/> would print out the title of a widget

<data:photo.url/> - Size: <data.photo.width /> x <data.photo.height /> would print attributes of a photo component. A photo may have components such as url, height, and width. Using the "." notation indicates that we want the URL for this photo, rather than a URL from something else.

Format

The 'identifier' (i) part can be any name you choose, and will be used to stand in for each new item in the list, each time through the loop. The set of data you specify for the values can be any piece of data described in the data tags article as being a list of items.

For example, in the blog posts widget, posts is a list. Code like the following will loop through each post, printing out the title for each one, with header tags around it.

Notice how "i" takes on the value of each post in turn, so you can get the title from each one.

Number Range

A loop tag allows you to iterate across an inclusive number range, such as ‘1 to 3', ‘-3 to -9', where the value of the variable takes the number's value. The following example would create an unordered list of 1, 2 and 3.

<b:loop var='i' values='1 to 3'>
<li><data:i /></li>
</b:loop>

Index Attribute

Loop tags also have an optional index attribute, which gives the zero-based index of the current iteration through the loop.

When to use if, elseif, or else

You can use the b:if, b:elseif and b:else tags to display certain content in particular cases, and other content in other cases. For example, you might only want to show certain text on the homepage, but different text when looking at individual posts.

Format

<b:if cond='condition'>
[content to display if condition is true]
<b:elseif cond='another condition'/>
[content to display if no previous if or elseif conditions have been true, and this elseif condition is true]
<b:else/>
[content to display if no if or elseif conditions are met]
</b:if>

The b:elseif and b:else tags are optional. Without them, the result will be either the content listed in the b:if section or nothing. The closing </b:if> is required in each case, however.

For "condition" you can put in anything that evaluates to either true or false. Some data tags are simply true/false values on their own, e.g. allowComments on a post. With other pieces of data, you can compare them with specific values to get a true or false. Here are some examples:

<b:if cond='data:post.showBacklinks'>
True if the current post is set to show backlinks.

<b:if cond='data:blog.pageType == "item"'>
True if the current page is an item page (post page).

<b:if cond='data:blog.pageType == "item" and data:post.showBacklinks'>
True if the current page is an item page (post page) and the current post is set to show backlinks.

<b:if cond='data:displayname != "Fred"'>
True if this is not Fred's display name.

<b:if cond='data:displayname == "Fred" or data:blog.pageType == "static_page"'>
True if Fred is the display name, or the current page is a static page (not a post page).

<b:if cond='data:post.numComments > 1'>
True if the current post has more than one comment.

<b:if cond='data:blog.pageType in {"static_page", "item"}'> OR <b:if cond='{"static_page", "item"} contains data:blog.pageType'>
True if the current page is a specific post, or a page.

When to use a Switch

You can use b:switch tag much like you would use a b:if tag that has several b:elseif tags. The advantage of a switch branch is that you don’t need to repeat the variable name. You can easily read them to see what defines each case, and what the default case is.

Format

<b:switch var='[Data expression]'>
<b:case value="[Value 1]" />
[Output if evaluation of var is equal to Value 1]
<b:case value="[Value 2]" />
[Output if evaluation of var is equal to Value 2]
[… any other values]
<b:default />
[Output if evaluation of var is not equal to any other stated b:case]
</b:switch>

Example

This example shows how to output a different header, depending on what type of page is being rendered.

<a expr:class='data:post.allowComments ? "comment" : "no-comment">Comment</a>
A link with the class "comment" when comments are allowed, and "no-comment" when they are not. The ternary operator (?:) takes the given boolean value and picks the first value (after the ?) if the boolean is true, or the second value (after the :) if the boolean is false.

Format

Examples

<b:eval expr="data:post.labels[0].url" />
Output the url of the first post label.

<b:eval expr='data:post.allowComments ? "Comment" : "Comments Disabled" />
Output “Comment” when comments are allowed, and “Comments Disabled” when they are not. Note that this expression makes use of the ternary operator.